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All of us can reply to a comment made by any user using @user-name and notify them. But I've noticed that this does not change when any user changes his\her username.

Example:
User 'A' posted a comment.
User 'B' replied @A ,ok.
When User 'A' changes his username to some other name,the @A does not change. If User 'A' changes his\her name to 'C',then the comment should also change to @C ,ok..

I've noticed that this is not implemented by looking at a comment made by a user. It seems that the user who posted the comment in the above link changed his\her username from 'Green' to 'A2B' but the comment that other user replied wasn't changed.

So why not make this a feature?

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    I guess that would be very server intensitive and not really useful at all.. As you can understand the context of such a conversation most of the times.
    – Kevin
    Jan 5, 2015 at 12:37
  • and I ofcourse meant intensive instead of intensitive ;)
    – Kevin
    Jan 5, 2015 at 12:44
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    I think you're being intesensitive, @Kevin Jan 5, 2015 at 13:00
  • @KevinVoorn On a properly normalized database, this shouldn't be any more intensive than the update to username itself. But, if the initial design decisions were made such that the username will not be changed (along with profile updates) it is altogether a different story! Jan 5, 2015 at 16:37
  • Updating the username is something entirely different then changing usernames in content, isn't it? While updating the username only requires you to lookup the ID and change the name, changing the name in content would require a script to go over all comments and search for the username. By the looks of it, this is far more intensive. @jjk_charles
    – Kevin
    Jan 6, 2015 at 8:01
  • @KevinVoorn what if the comments are designed to store the ID (or any other key that is unique to the @ User) rather than the Name, and dynamically fetch Name from the User table when the comment is being displayed? Jan 6, 2015 at 15:27
  • @jjk_charles Might be possible, I'm not really sure how they designed their database structure.
    – Kevin
    Jan 6, 2015 at 15:28
  • @KevinVoorn Exactly my doubt too, that is what I mentioned in my initial comment too! Jan 6, 2015 at 15:30
  • @jjk_charles Yea, I haven't really thought about your alternative, however I still think it wouldn't be that useful anyway.
    – Kevin
    Jan 6, 2015 at 15:33

1 Answer 1

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The @user reply is there to notify the user that they got a message. The content of the comments are all that really matters to later readers, so following the converstation isn't really that difficult. Whether the conversation as between @A and @B, or @C and @B doesn't really matter.

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    And if it does matter, perhaps that conversation should have been had in chat? Jan 5, 2015 at 13:42
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    I have to disagree as finding older posts with mis-labeled comments can be quite confusing, e.g. here. Given the proliferation of deleted comments as posts age, it's hard to tell whether a commenter is referring to a post that no longer exists when they're actually just referring to the above commenter by another name. Dec 1, 2015 at 16:28
  • @MichaelChirico See George's comment above. If it matters who a comment was said to, then what's the content really worth to later readers? They should probably just be cleaned up. Dec 1, 2015 at 17:04

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